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5.3 Other references




Books: Curriculum

Smith, D. L. & Lovat, T.J. 1995, Curriculum: Action on Reflection Revisited, Social Science Press, Wentworth Falls.

Grundy, S. 1987, Curriculum: Product or Praxis, The Falmer Press, Lewes.

Marsh, C. (ed.). 1998, Teaching Studies of Society and Environment, second edition, Prentice Hall, Sydney.

Books: History curriculum

Birt, D. & Nichol, J. 1975, Games and Simulations in History, Longman, London.

Dickinson, A.L. & Lee, P.J. 1978, History Teaching and Historical Understanding, Heinemann, London.

Gray, I. 1988, Essentials of History, Thomas Nelson, Melbourne.

Fines, J. 1983, Teaching History, Holmes McDougall, Edinburgh.

Schools Council. 1976, A New Look at History, Holmes McDougall, Edinburgh.

Shemilt, D. 1980, History 13-16 Evaluation Study, Holmes McDougall, Edinburgh.


5.4 Journals about teaching and learning History

Agora, Victorian Historical Association, Melbourne.

American Historical Review.

Australian History Association Bulletin.

Curriculum Perspectives, Australian Curriculum Studies Association, Belconnen, ACT.

Hindsight, History Teachers’ Association of Western Australia.

The Australian History Teacher, History Teachers Association of Australia.

The History Teacher, Queensland History Teachers Association, Brisbane.

Teaching History, The Historical Association, London.

Teaching History, History Teachers' Association of N.S.W.

The History and Social Science Teacher, Grolier Ltd, Toronto.

The Social Educator, SEAA, Australia.

Social Education, National Council for the Social Sciences (USA).

Theory and Research in Social Education, National Council for the Social Sciences (USA).
5.5 Web sites

The following list includes a range of types of sites that History teachers and/or students might access.


Queensland School Curriculum Council. Available URL: http://www.qscc.qld.edu.au/home.html (accessed August 2000)

This site includes the full version of the Queensland Years 1 to 10 SOSE Syllabus, together with sample curriculum modules.


Curriculum Corporation: Discovering Democracy. Available URL:

http://www.curriculum.edu.au/democracy/ (accessed August 2000)

This site includes background papers and news related to using the Discovering Democracy School Materials Project resources.

AFSSSE (Australian Federation of Societies for Studies of Society and Environment). Available URL:

http://www.pa.ash.org.au/afssse/ (accessed August 2000)

This site is the official site of the national professional associations in the SOSE field. It includes links to state associations.




Education Network Australia. Available URL:

http://www.edna.edu.au/EdNA/ (accessed August 2000)

This is the teacher professional development site established by the federal government.

Education Queensland Framework Project. Available URL:


http://education.qld.gov.au/corporate/newbasics/ (accessed August 2000)

This site includes papers, discussion groups and materials on the ‘New Basics’ and ‘Rich Tasks’.


PRIMEDIA Special Interest Publications available URL:

http://www.theHistorynet.com/ (accessed August 2000)

A USA-based site with rich resources on many historical topics.
The US Library of Congress official site. Available URL

http://www.loc.gov/ (accessed August 2000)


Internet History Sourcebook. Available URL:

http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ (accessed August 2000)

Paul Halsall has authored this site. It features vast numbers of resources on a large range of topics. The Modern History Sourcebook component includes readings on historiography and philosophy of History, as well as a section on History and the movies. The site is based at Fordham University in New York.
The Hidden Histories project. Available URL:

http://www.mov.vic.gov.au/HiddenHistories/ (accessed August 2000)

This site encourages student research and writing of Aboriginal histories. A collaboration of the Victorian Department of Education's Global Classroom Project and Museum Victoria's Indigenous Cultures Program team.
History teachers at Cherwell School in England. Available URL:

http://atschool.eduweb.co.uk/cherwell/History/ (accessed August 2000)

Large numbers of historical sources, both textual and pictorial. This site includes links to extensive online collections of articles and documents.
The Royal Ontario Museum. Available URL:

http://www.rom.on.ca/ (accessed August 2000)

Very engaging site. It uses elements of the museum’s collection to stimulate historical and archaeological thinking by those who visit the site.
Jack Turner’s War. Available URL:

http://collections.ic.gc.ca/turner/ (accessed August 2000)

A Canadian site which is government funded, that features a rich collection of photographs taken by Jack Turner during World War 1. It demonstrates the value of the Internet in allowing access to pictorial sources.
National Archives of the Public Records Office in Britain. Available URL:

http://learningcurve.pro.gov.uk//politics/ (accessed August 2000)

This web site offers valuable textual and pictorial sources on political struggles, including those of the Chartists and the Suffragettes.
The Art of the First World War, funded by UNESCO. Available URL:

http://www.art-ww1.com.html (accessed August 2000)

Displays 100 paintings held by some major galleries and museums in Europe.
British National Grid for Learning (NGfL). Available URL:

http://vtc.ngfl.gov.uk/resource/cits/history/index.html (accessed August 2000)

This site on using information technologies in History is a component of the project sponsored by the British government NGfL project. It is worth visiting the home page of the NGfL to see the other elements that are accessible.
Industrial Revolution Hunt site. Available URL:

http://www.kn.pacbell.com/wired/fil/pages/hunteuropesi. (accessed August 2000)



This is a reminder of the need to be careful when using the Internet. The site is marked by some grand generalisations and some atrocious expression. The site appears to have been authored by school students.


1 Originally Historical Studies of Australia and New Zealand, and then just Historical Studies, it has recently become Australian Historical Studies. It now competes with other journals such as Australian Cultural Studies, Journal of Australian Studies and the Australian Journal of Politics and History, as well as those from specialist fields such as Labour History, Aboriginal History, Public History Review and others (see, Australian Historical Association Bulletin, No 84, 1997, pp. 5-29, for a survey of History journals).

2 Murphy J and Smart J, 1988, “Introduction” in Murphy, J. and Smart, J. (Eds), The forgotten Fifties; aspects of Australian society and culture in the 1950s, a special issue of Australian Historical Studies, Vol 28, No 109, pp.1 and 5.

3 Penny Russell and Richard White called their edited History of 19th and 20th Australia a pastiche, “not a single story of Australia but … a range of stories which view the past from different angles …a bridge from the seductive authority of older narratives to the fluidity of the histories of today”. See, Russell, P. and White, R. (Eds), 1994, Pastiche 1; Reflections on 19th Century Australia, Sydney, Allen and Unwin, p. ix.

4 Linnikin, J. 1997, “Contending approaches”, in Denoon, D. (Ed), The Cambridge History of the Pacific Islanders, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, p. 31

5 For the defence of “traditional” History see, Windschuttle, K. 1998, The Killing of History; How a discipline is being murdered by literary critics and social theorists, Sydney, Macleay Press.





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